Rev 20

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The Millennium
Revelation 20
Revelation 20
Introduction
Revelation 20
Introduction
• The Old Testament prophets foretold a time
when Messiah would reign over a world full of
peace and prosperity.
• This would be a time when even the nature of
animals would be changed and the wolf and
lamb would dwell together.
• This Messianic kingdom is still to come and is
often referred to as the Millennium.
Revelation 20
Introduction
• The word millennium comes from the Latin for
“one thousand years”.
• A 1000-year period, the Millennium, is
mentioned six times in this chapter.
• Nonetheless, many sincere Bible students
deny the future literal reign of Christ on earth
and the literal sense of the millennium.
Revelation 20
Introduction
• It would seem, however, that an actual 1000year span of time is exactly what this chapter
is talking about.
• In all seriousness, there is nothing in the text
that demands a figurative understanding.
• If we take this chapter just as it reads, it is
really not that difficult to understand.
Revelation 20
Introduction
• A few biblical reasons may be helpful.
• We should understand why a period of time
like this is not only a nice idea, which could be
mere wishful thinking.
• It is, in fact, biblically necessary.
Purposes for the Millennium
Purposes for the Millennium
1. To fulfill the O.T. promises to Israel regarding
her future re-gathering and kingdom.
2. To allow the promised Messiah to reign on
David’s throne, that is, as an earthly king.
3. To answer the saints’ prayer of “Thy kingdom
come, thy will be done on earth as it is in
heaven.”
4. To fulfill the promises to the church that the
saints will reign with Christ.
Purposes for the Millennium
5. To bring about the complete redemption of
nature promised since O.T. times.
–
See also Rom 8:19-22
6. To allow Christ’s glory and righteousness to
be displayed publicly to the nations.
7. To give fallen man an opportunity to serve
the Lord in an earthly environment free from
Satan’s influence.
Revelation 20
Outline
Revelation 20
I.
II.
III.
IV.
Satan Bound
The Thousand Years
The Final Rebellion
The Great White Throne
Outline
20:1-3
20:4-6
20:7-10
20:11-15
I. Satan Bound
20:1-3
I. Satan Bound
20:1-3
• 20:1 the key to the bottomless pit
• The last time we saw this key was in
Revelation 9.
• At that point a fallen angel used it to release
demonic locusts upon the earth.
• This time an angel (presumably a good one)
uses it to imprison Satan for the length of the
Kingdom Age.
I. Satan Bound
20:1-3
• 20:1 Notice that the angel in this section is
not described as anyone special – not a “Super
Turbo Powerful Cherub-class Angel.”
• He’s an angel – just an angel.
• When God decides it’s time for Satan to be
bound, he can’t even put up a fight.
• In the end he is bound and cast into “the
abyss,” which is then shut up and sealed.
I. Satan Bound
20:1-3
• 20:2-3 thousand years (2x) … a little while
• This latter short phrase can be unpacked as
“an indeterminate period of time of short
duration.”
• If John wanted to express something like “an
indeterminate period of time of long
duration,” they had the vocabulary to do so.
• For example, “a long while,” would have said it
perfectly well.
I. Satan Bound
20:1-3
• Take Away Point:
• There is no way to make peace with the devil.
• “There is no neutral ground in the universe;
every square inch, every split second, is
claimed by God and counter-claimed by
Satan” – C.S. Lewis
• That great tug-of-war will now be stopped as
the Lord Jesus Christ asserts His rulership for
the next 1000 years.
II. The Thousand Years
20:4-6
II. The Thousand Years
20:4-6
• Chuck Smith explains,
• “The Bible teaches that Jesus is coming
again… The purpose of the second coming of
Christ is to establish the kingdom of God on
the earth. … During the Millennium the
damage of the Tribulation will be reversed,
and Christ will reign on the throne of David
(Isa. 9:6-7; Zech. 12:10).
II. The Thousand Years
20:4-6
• Chuck Smith explains,
• “In Revelation 5:10, John said, ‘And have made
us kings and priests to our God; And we shall
reign on the earth.’ Hence, when Jesus comes
to reign, the church will reign with Him.
Revelation 20:4 tells us that the length of our
reign on the earth will be one thousand years.”
II. The Thousand Years
20:4-6
• 20:4 Who exactly sits on these thrones and
who has judgment committed to them?
• Very possibly the saints, who will have
returned with Jesus Christ.
• Souls of those … beheaded Since the church
was already raised before the Tribulation, it
would make sense that the Tribulation Saints
would receive a special mention here.
II. The Thousand Years
• 20:5
the first resurrection
20:4-6
How is that?
– Christ was the first to rise from the dead and
receive a resurrection body.
– And what about those odd appearances just after
that in Matthew 27:52-53?
– The dead in Christ and raptured believers met the
Lord in the air – necessarily before this point on
any view of the Rapture.
– And what about the two witnesses we read about
in Revelation 11?
II. The Thousand Years
20:4-6
• 20:5
the first resurrection
• There are two possible explanations, both of
which seem equally valid.
II. The Thousand Years
20:4-6
• First, it can be understood as the first
resurrection of the Millennium.
• In that case we will see the second
resurrection at the end of this chapter.
• This later resurrection is in 20:12-13 at which
Christ judges the lost according to their works.
II. The Thousand Years
20:4-6
• A second possible explanation goes as follows:
• The first resurrection includes all the
resurrections of the just from Christ, through
the Rapture and then here.
• It is first in the sense that it is a first type of
resurrection – a resurrection unto life.
• The second resurrection will be to judgment
and will be followed by “the second death.”
II. The Thousand Years
20:4-6
• 20:6 Regardless of how we understand the
word “first,” all who are resurrected by now
will reign with Christ throughout the
Millennium.
• The first resurrection is contrasted here with
the second death.
II. The Thousand Years
20:4-6
• Take Away Point:
• We will one day rule with Christ. We should
be able to settle our differences peacefully
even now.
• Paul makes this point to the Corinthians, who
were taking one another to court.
• See 1 Corinthians 6:1-8
III. The Final Rebellion
20:7-10
III. The Final Rebellion
20:7-10
• 20:7 William R. Newell states,
• “Here we see the Devil loosed after the
thousand years of imprisonment, and
immediately rushing back to his old task of
deluding earth’s inhabitants to that “war”
against God, to which the “enmity against
God” of the “mind of the flesh” was ever
prone, but for which, during the thousand
years, leadership was lacking.”
III. The Final Rebellion
20:7-10
• 20:7 Please note that Satan does not escape
or fight his way out of the bottomless pit, but
is “released.”
• God is still completely sovereign at this point
and has simply decided that it suits His
purposes to release the devil from his prison
for “a little while.” (See 20:3)
• In other words, this was part of God’s original
plan – from the beginning.
III. The Final Rebellion
20:7-10
• This is probably not the same as the Gog and
Magog battle of Ezekiel 38-39:
• In that case only certain named nations seem
to be allied against Israel.
– See Ezekiel 38:1-6
• It is also clear that in Ezekiel the earthly Israel
continues and life goes on afterward.
– See Ezekiel 39:11-16.
III. The Final Rebellion
20:7-10
• This battle of Revelation is much more
climactic:
• Nations from all over the earth are involved.
(20:8)
• It ends with the devil cast into the lake of fire,
followed by the White Throne Judgment.
(20:10-15)
III. The Final Rebellion
20:7-10
• 20:10 When the devil enters the Lake of
Fire, the beast and the false prophet are still
there.
• They will be tormented day and night forever
and ever.
• This expresses both unbroken continuity and
unending duration.
• We are wrong to try to diminish the language
of this verse. See 22:18-19.
III. The Final Rebellion
20:7-10
• 20:10 Robert L. Thomas emphasizes,
• “However the Bible may speak of that future
punishment … it presents a picture of mental
agony and corporeal suffering combined in
proportion to the guilt of those who have
sinned.”
III. The Final Rebellion
20:7-10
• Once Christ establishes His kingdom, we might
easily wonder about the purpose of this final
rebellion.
• There are actually several possible reasons
why God would allow something like this to
take place.
Purposes for the Final Rebellion
Purposes for the Final Rebellion
1. To show us that the human race is not by
nature good.
2. To show us that peace and prosperity will
not save human souls.
3. To show us that living in a righteous
environment will not save us.
4. To show us that good government cannot
change fallen human hearts.
Purposes for the Final Rebellion
5. To show that humanity does not naturally
seek after God.
6. To show that Satan will not change his ways,
freely now – nor after long punishment.
7. To show that the only possible hope for
salvation is the saving blood of Jesus Christ.
After the Kingdom Age, human hearts will
still be inclined toward evil.
IV. The Great White Throne 20:11-15
IV. The Great White Throne 20:11-15
• Keep this separate from The Judgment Seat of
Christ (Romans 14:10, 2 Corinthians 5:10),
which will be for believers.
• That will happen before the Millennium – so
that faithfulness of believers can be rewarded
accordingly.
• This is illustrated by The Parable of the Ten
Minas in Luke 19:11-27, but we won’t get into
that right now.
IV. The Great White Throne 20:11-15
• 20:14-15 Again, from Robert L. Thomas,
• “Language like this leaves no room for any
form of universalism, soul sleep, an
intermediate state, a second chance, or
annihilation of the wicked …
• This is the negation of eternal life which the
lost could have received. But it is more than
that. It is a ‘torturous existence’ … the direct
infliction of misery … through the eternal fire.”
IV. The Great White Throne 20:11-15
• What are the books involved at the White
Throne Judgment?
• Perhaps the following…
Books Used at the Judgment
Books Used at the Judgment
• The Bible (John 12:48)
• The Book of the Living containing the names of all
who are born (Psalm 69:28)
• Those who die while rejecting Christ have their
names blotted out of this book, for they are truly
dead. (Revelation 3:5)
• Believers names are recorded in the Lamb’s Book of
Life. (Revelation 13:8, 17:8, 21:27)
• The Book of Life in 20:15 might be either of the
previous two.
In Conclusion
In Conclusion
• Take Away Points:
In Conclusion
• Take Away Points:
1. There is no way to make peace with the devil.
In Conclusion
• Take Away Points:
1. There is no way to make peace with the devil.
2. We will one day rule with Christ. We should
be able to settle our differences peacefully
even now.
In Conclusion
• Take Away Points:
1. There is no way to make peace with the devil.
2. We will one day rule with Christ. We should
be able to settle our differences peacefully
even now.
3. The world ends with rebellion and judgment.
The victory goes to the Lamb and those
written in His book of Life.
In Conclusion
• Revelation 20 has shown us that after Christ’s
return there will be a glorious Kingdom Age.
• But the Millennium will be followed by a Final
Rebellion and a Final Judgment.
• The Lord leaves our eternal destiny in our
hands.
• Only those who turn to Jesus now will be
saved from the lake of fire.
One Last Scripture
“For God did not send His Son into the world to
condemn the world, but that the world
through Him might be saved.
He who believes in Him is not condemned; but
he who does not believe is condemned
already, because he has not believed in the
name of the only begotten Son of God.”
– John 3:17-18 (NKJV)